The 12 Beasts of Custom Savannah GA

While starting a custom installation business does not qualify you as a mythical hero, dont be taken by surprise when you have to confront these beasts that try to kill your young business.

The StoneHill Group, Inc
770-399-1936
47 Perimeter Center East
Atlanta, GA
T.A.M.A. Investigations, Inc.
770-682-4376
P.O. Box 1064
Snellville, GA
Data Dome Inc.
404-814-0739
1050 Lindridge Drive NE
Atlanta, GA
Auto Tag Emmissions
(770) 739-6870
5010 Austell Rd
Austell, GA
Toca Family Business Services
404-275-9237
595 Piedmont Ave. NE
Atlanta, GA
4QR Business Solutions
770-385-0138
PO Box 81227
Conyers, GA
Lantern Capital Advisors
678 385 5937
400 Galleria Parkway, Suite 1500
Atlanta, GA
Scott Madden & Assoc
(404) 814-0020
10 Piedmont Ctr NE Ste 805
Atlanta, GA
User Insight
(770) 391-1099
115 Perimeter Ctr Pl NE Ste 440
Atlanta, GA
Resolute Consulting Group Partner
(770) 998-5281
3131 East Shadowlawn, NE
Atlanta, GA
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The 12 Beasts of Custom

Hercules was a mythical hero in Greek literature who had to perform 12 labors. These were feats of strength that were impossible for normal men. One by one he had to defeat these terrible beasts set on devouring him. Against all odds he conquered all 12, and became a legendary hero.

While starting a custom installation business does not qualify you as a mythical hero, don't be taken by surprise when you have to confront these beasts that try to kill your young business.

Beast 1: Starting your Business. It seems temptingly simple to begin with your hard work, your vision, your enthusiasm, and your own money. Bootstrapping a cash-starved new business with sweat equity is a huge feat. Consider the risk: most new businesses fail within the first three years.

Beast 2: Dealerships. Major manufacturers will not allow you to become an authorized dealer unless you fulfill three conditions. First, you can't be a dealer if they already have enough coverage in your market. Second, you cant be a dealer until you have favorable financial statements. Third, you cant be a dealer unless you make large opening purchases and annual commitments.

Beast 3: Breaking into the Market. Open the yellow pages and survey the giants in the land. They have established infrastructures of storefronts, dealerships, trained employees, discounts, and happy customers. The builders and architects have working relationships already in place with your competitors. When you start out, you are a just a puny David with stones to hurl at Goliath.

Beast 4: Employees. Can you offer great money for experienced techs? Do you have time and budget to train newbies? After you find a great new hire and fully nurture him, train him, reward him, and praise him, how can you prevent him from leaving? Even with non-compete agreements, your best installer or salesman might go into competition with you and be a real beast.

Beast 5: Partners and Capital. At some point you will need more trucks, more employees, new dealerships, a better facility, etc. Growth takes capital. Money always comes with strings attached. Debt can cripple you, investors can take your business away from you and your best friend/partner can turn on you. After you work 80 hours a week, your wife may get fed up and divorce you, taking half of your business.

Beast 6: Bleeding Edge Technology. With rapidly changing innovations, it's all in your timing. If you move too slowly, you are left behind in the dust. If you move too quickly and start selling unproven products your systems can crash and burn, cutting your business deeply. How long do you wait?

Beast 7: Falling Prices. The most expensive products that we sell don't bring us the most profits. A few years ago, if a client wanted a great home theater you could sell a video projector setup for $50,000. Now you can beat that for $5,000. Your customer can get a plasma TV at Costco for $2,000less than your dealer cost. Where is your markup to compete with that? How can you sell up...

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